Cela fait 9 ans qu'il est au pouvoir.
Pas une année sans que magistrats, avocats, spécialistes de la justice réclament plus de moyens.
Pas une année sans que la protection de l'enfance ne réclame plus de moyens.
Mais E. Macron préfère se défausser.
Etonnant, non ?
👋 bonjour à tous
L’Assemblée Générale de l’asso approche à grands pas, on se retrouve le Jeudi 18 juin 2026 à 18h30 à La Taverne du Geek, Poitiers
Nous continurons la soirée avec le traditionel PWN PowerPoint Karaoke #5.
Venez nombreuses et nombreux.
https://t.co/VoNJ0xzNIp
Vous savez quoi je vous partage même. Faites votre buzz je vous aides. Vous ne vous êtes pas INFILTRÉ vous êtes rentrés DE FORCE dans un lieu privé et vous avez fait peur au public ! Les gens regardez bien ce montage. J’ai TOUTES LES IMAGES. Je vais répondre, y aura plus AUCUN doute.
M. @PascalPraud,
Demain matin à 9h, je souhaite me rendre sur le plateau de L’Heure des Pros sur CNEWS afin de rétablir les faits et rappeler la réalité scientifique de la situation que nous vivons actuellement.
Vos propos sont inacceptables. Ils discréditent le travail de milliers de scientifiques et sous-entendent, sans fondement, une manipulation médiatique autour d’un épisode météorologique pourtant exceptionnel ; inédit pour un mois de mai, avec des conséquences concrètes sur nos terroirs, les travailleurs exposés en extérieur, l’agriculture et les écosystèmes.
La contradiction et le débat sont légitimes. Le discrédit systématique de la science climatique ne l’est pas. Même s'il suffit de se rendre à l'extérieur pour constater votre erreur, je veux qu'on en discute en face à face.
Auriez-vous, à minima, l’élégance de présenter des excuses ?
Serge Zaka
Les grands groupes veulent nous voler le 1er mai !
Le 10 avril, avec le soutien de l’extrême droite et de la droite, une proposition de loi des macronistes veut ouvrir la brèche du travail salarié le 1er mai
🚨 Interpellez vos députés sur https://t.co/Bl9dGPPLrl et ici !
Le 1er mai est à nous ! Ne les laissons pas faire !
Ce soir c'est rattrapage CSS à la Taverne du Geek à Poitiers avec le seul et l'unique Enguerran Weiss ! #dev#css#tech#poitiers#pwn
https://t.co/Z6fn3bo4n5
Ça arrive vite ! 👯🏼 "Vous n’êtes pas votre utilisateur : Les erreurs classiques et les astuces pour les éviter" par Adrien Ballet 🧑🏼🏫 C'est demain, 18h30 à la Taverne du geek ! 🍻
https://t.co/ojiydIJY0b
Every time we've made it easier to write software, we've ended up writing exponentially more of it.
When high-level languages replaced assembly, programmers didn't write less code - they wrote orders of magnitude more, tackling problems that would have been economically impossible before. When frameworks abstracted away the plumbing, we didn't reduce our output - we built more ambitious applications. When cloud platforms eliminated infrastructure management, we didn't scale back - we spun up services for use cases that never would have justified a server room.
@levie recently articulated why this pattern is about to repeat itself at a scale we haven't seen before, using Jevons Paradox as the frame. The argument resonates because it's playing out in real-time in our developer tools. The initial question everyone asks is "will this replace developers?" but just watch what actually happens. Teams that adopt these tools don't always shrink their engineering headcount - they expand their product surface area. The three-person startup that could only maintain one product now maintains four. The enterprise team that could only experiment with two approaches now tries seven.
The constraint being removed isn't competence but it's the activation energy required to start something new. Think about that internal tool you've been putting off because "it would take someone two weeks and we can't spare anyone"? Now it takes three hours. That refactoring you've been deferring because the risk/reward math didn't work? The math just changed.
This matters because software engineers are uniquely positioned to understand what's coming. We've seen this movie before, just in smaller domains. Every abstraction layer - from assembly to C to Python to frameworks to low-code - followed the same pattern. Each one was supposed to mean we'd need fewer developers. Each one instead enabled us to build more software.
Here's the part that deserves more attention imo: the barrier being lowered isn't just about writing code faster. It's about the types of problems that become economically viable to solve with software. Think about all the internal tools that don't exist at your company. Not because no one thought of them, but because the ROI calculation never cleared the bar. The custom dashboard that would make one team 10% more efficient but would take a week to build. The data pipeline that would unlock insights but requires specialized knowledge. The integration that would smooth a workflow but touches three different systems.
These aren't failing the cost-benefit analysis because the benefit is low - they're failing because the cost is high. Lower that cost by "10x", and suddenly you have an explosion of viable projects. This is exactly what's happening with AI-assisted development, and it's going to be more dramatic than previous transitions because we're making previously "impossible" work possible.
The second-order effects get really interesting when you consider that every new tool creates demand for more tools. When we made it easier to build web applications, we didn't just get more web applications - we got an entire ecosystem of monitoring tools, deployment platforms, debugging tools, and testing frameworks. Each of these spawned their own ecosystems. The compounding effect is nonlinear.
Now apply this logic to every domain where we're lowering the barrier to entry. Every new capability unlocked creates demand for supporting capabilities. Every workflow that becomes tractable creates demand for adjacent workflows. The surface area of what's economically viable expands in all directions.
For engineers specifically, this changes the calculus of what we choose to work on. Right now, we're trained to be incredibly selective about what we build because our time is the scarce resource. But when the cost of building drops dramatically, the limiting factor becomes imagination, "taste" and judgment, not implementation capacity. The skill shifts from "what can I build given my constraints?" to "what should we build given that constraints have in some ways been evaporated?"
The meta-point here is that we keep making the same prediction error. Every time we make something more efficient, we predict it will mean less of that thing. But efficiency improvements don't reduce demand - they reveal latent demand that was previously uneconomic to address. Coal. Computing. Cloud infrastructure. And now, knowledge work.
The pattern is so consistent that the burden of proof should shift. Instead of asking "will AI agents reduce the need for human knowledge workers?" we should be asking "what orders of magnitude increase in knowledge work output are we about to see?"
For software engineers it's the same transition we've navigated successfully several times already. The developers who thrived weren't the ones who resisted higher-level abstractions; they were the ones who used those abstractions to build more ambitious systems. The same logic applies now, just at a larger scale.
The real question is whether we're prepared for a world where the bottleneck shifts from "can we build this?" to "should we build this?" That's a fundamentally different problem space, and it requires fundamentally different skills.
We're about to find out what happens when the cost of knowledge work drops by an order of magnitude. History suggests we (perhaps) won't do less work - we'll discover we've been massively under-investing in knowledge work because it was too expensive to do all the things that were actually worth doing.
The paradox isn't that efficiency creates abundance. The paradox is that we keep being surprised by it.
J-3 avant notre prochain événement ! 🎉 "Les IA génératives vidéo d'aujourd'hui et de demain" par Hedy Magroun 🧑🏼🏫 Ce jeudi, 18h30 à la Taverne du geek ! 🍻
https://t.co/569k4cE0t4
Salut à tous ! On se voit la semaine prochaine ? ⚡ "Les IA génératives vidéo d'aujourd'hui et de demain" par Hedy Magroun 🧑🏼🏫 jeudi, 18h30 à la Taverne du geek ! 🍻
https://t.co/569k4cE0t4
[CONCOURS🎁] Pour célébrer la sortie du nouveau set LEGO® Game Boy™, tentez de remporter un exemplaire !
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- RT ce post
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1 gagnant sera tiré au sort le 08/10.